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Friday, August 14, 2009
There Is No Map Of That Dread Place
It's not directly tome related, but Jon Decker was nice enough to give me a heads-up about a Photoshop brush set of archaic maps he posted on his blog.
If it's tome making you're doing, consider that these brushes need not be used in their entirety. I suggest using a coastline or other characteristic and eliminating the rest of the image thereby creating the illusion of a new unidentifiable mapped region.
I'll see if I can put together some Antarctica or Lovecraftian location related maps for this community.
Keep in touch, oh, ruler of Propnomicon and its lands therein.
Oh, the map brushes are brilliant. I was just too lazy to explain how people could use them. From hanging around on some of the scrapbooking sites I've been getting a real appreciation for the layered, multi-textured method of presentation. That's something these would be ideal for.
3 comments:
Thanks for the shoutout.
If it's tome making you're doing, consider that these brushes need not be used in their entirety. I suggest using a coastline or other characteristic and eliminating the rest of the image thereby creating the illusion of a new unidentifiable mapped region.
I'll see if I can put together some Antarctica or Lovecraftian location related maps for this community.
Keep in touch, oh, ruler of Propnomicon and its lands therein.
Oh, the map brushes are brilliant. I was just too lazy to explain how people could use them. From hanging around on some of the scrapbooking sites I've been getting a real appreciation for the layered, multi-textured method of presentation. That's something these would be ideal for.
So it boils down to Lovecraftian scrapbooking, now. Thanks, Jon, for producing great stuff!
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